Categories
cybernetics

institutional failure

You cannot make the world better by changing who occupies positions of power while leaving the structure of power itself, and the machinery rewarding its behaviour, intact.

Categories
cybernetics

why administrative organisational systems fail

Administrative systems fail when they become better at preserving their own procedures than understanding or remediating the human realities those procedures were intended to address.

Categories
cybernetics

Insurance Industry: Climate, Consequence, Catastrophe

Climate change becomes civilisational risk when insurance can no longer translate catastrophe into recoverable cost.

Categories
Philosophy

tribal

War persists not simply because people or cultures remember conflict, but because entire civilisations derive identity, coherence, profit, and meaning from its repetition.

Categories
Philosophy

can’t buy me love

Wealth is not virtue; it is often merely the moment at which exploitation, inheritance, appetite, spectacle, and institutional obedience acquire sufficient polish that the public begins misunderstanding aggregate power as sufficient proxy for strategic wisdom and true moral virtue.

Categories
Philosophy

The Phone Died. The Bill Survived.

The phone died; the contract lived on, quietly proving who really owns whom.

Categories
communication

comment is free, but are facts sacred?

Facts may not be sacred in practice, but the alternative is shameless informational feudalism: a world in which power determines visibility, visibility determines belief, and belief dissociatively drifts away from the world it claims to describe.

Categories
Philosophy

of red caps and lacquered smiles

The court of red caps and lacquered smiles now finds itself chained to a king who mistakes appetite for destiny and spectacle for wisdom at precisely the historical moment requiring restraint, literacy, diplomacy, patience, and institutional coherence.

Categories
Philosophy

impermanence

There are evenings where the sky itself appears aware of some immense and unspoken sadness, as though the atmosphere has briefly become conscious of time and cannot quite contain the weight of it. Not despair exactly. Not tragedy in the theatrical sense. Something older, quieter, and more pervasive than that. A diffuse melancholy without stable […]

Categories
cybernetics

Malakacene: The Rise of Weaponised Incompetence

Malakacene: the long historical moment in which technologically mediated societies stopped selecting primarily for competence, wisdom, restraint, and institutional responsibility, and instead became increasingly vulnerable to the rapid propagation of spectacle, grievance, aggression, narcissism, and performative certainty masquerading as leadership.

Categories
Philosophy

Populist Paranoia and the Crystalline Plasticity of Political Communication

Technologically mediated democracies are invoking remedial, simplified political coherence faster than they are generating the intelligence and/or aptitude required to govern the accelerating complexity of contemporary socioeconomic experience.

Categories
Philosophy

Ebola

Ebola reminds us that civilisation may not fail through drama, but through delay, distraction, and a pathogen moving faster than our institutional cadence and cultural expectations.